Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. 25 de nov. de 2019 · Grace Coolidge. OVERVIEW: BORN: DIED: EDUCATION: POLITICAL PARTY: Republican. HIGHLIGHTS: PORTRAITS: RESOURCES: BIOGRAPHIES: National First Ladies’ Library The White House White House Historical Association First Ladies (C-SPAN) MEDIA COVERAGE: PET RACCOON:

  2. Grace Anna Goodhue Coolidge (January 3, 1879 – July 8, 1957) Grace Coolidge endeared herself to Americans and was thought of by many to be her husband’s greatest asset. Known for her ability to carry on a conversation, her fashion sense, her love of baseball and her lifelong support of the deaf, Mrs. Coolidge was a true complement to President Coolidge’s stoic personality.

  3. Anna Grace Coolidge Goodhue fue la esposa del presidente de los Estados Unidos, Calvin Coolidge casados en 1905. En primer lugar entre 1921 y 1923 fue la Segunda Dama de Estados Unidos y entre 1923 y 1929 fue la primera dama.

  4. 13 de abr. de 2017 · Grace Coolidge, accompanied on this day by her dogs Rob Roy and Prudence Prim, cheerfully greeted the veterans, most of them dressed in civilian clothes. According to one account of the day’s festivities, “Mrs. Coolidge put all of her delightful personality in the entertainment of her guests . . . the First Lady of the Land was at her best ...

  5. Grace Anna Goodhue Coolidge (ur. 3 stycznia 1879 w Burlington , zm. 8 lipca 1957 w Northampton ) – żona prezydenta Stanów Zjednoczonych Calvina Coolidge’a i druga , a następnie pierwsza dama USA w latach 1923–1929.

  6. Partially on her own accord and partly at the direction of her husband, Grace Coolidge stayed out of politics, although the president did gain from her visibility as first lady. American fashion icon who embraced less conservative, more casual clothing. Previously a teacher at the Clarke School for the Deaf, she promoted education for the deaf ...

  7. 4 de dic. de 2022 · Grace Coolidge’s interest in radio became known to the newspapermen who followed her husband, Vice President Calvin Coolidge. In the spring of 1922, to boost interest in the radio, photographs began appearing in newspapers around the country of various public figures listening to their radio sets.